However, The Republic reports that the rules for vehicle impoundment are changing at DUI checkpoints due to concerns that undocumented immigrants were being wrongfully targeted in such operations. Under new the guidelines, Los Angeles police officers will attempt to contact the registered owner of a stopped vehicle if the owner of the vehicle is a licensed driver who can respond to the checkpoint within a reasonable period.
]]> Even with the new guidelines, unlicensed drivers will still be cited and DUI suspects will still have their vehicles impounded. Once a vehicle is impounded, law enforcement agencies usually require that the vehicle remain locked up for a minimum of 30 days. Vehicle owners will then have to pay expensive fees to get their car released from the impound lot.Some critics of the new policy say that the new guidelines threaten traffic safety and don’t do enough to discourage people from breaking the law. Yet immigration activists say that the old rules disproportionately targeted undocumented immigrants, who are not able to obtain licenses legally in most states. Perhaps the new DUI checkpoint rules will create more fairness on the roads.
Related Resources:
Find a Los Angeles DUI Attorney (FindLaw)Traffic Stops and Roadblocks (FindLaw)The Current State of DUI Checkpoints in California (FindLaw KnowledgeBase)]]>View the original article here
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